Paper
4 June 2002 SLAC's polarized electron source laser system for the E-158 parity violation experiment
Axel Brachmann, Ray K. Alley, M. J. Browne, G. D. Cates, James Clendenin, J. deLamare, Josef C. Frisch, T. Galetto, E. W. Hughes, Thomas Brian Humensky, K. S. Kumar, Peter A. Mastromarino, J. Sodja, James L. Turner, Klaus H. Witte, Michael B. Woods
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
SLAC E158 is an experiment to make the first measurement of parity violation in Moller scattering. The left-right cross-section asymmetry in the elastic scattering of a 45-GeV polarized electron beam off unpolarized electrons in a liquid hydrogen target will be measured to an accuracy of better than 10-8, with the expected Standard Model asymmetry being approximately 10-7. An intense circularly polarized laser beam for the polarized electron source is required with the ability to quickly switch between left and right polarization states with minimal left-right asymmetries in the parameters of the electron beam. This laser beam is produced by a unique SLAC-designed, flash-lamp pumped, Ti:Sapphire laser. We present this laser system design and initial results from recent commissioning runs.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Axel Brachmann, Ray K. Alley, M. J. Browne, G. D. Cates, James Clendenin, J. deLamare, Josef C. Frisch, T. Galetto, E. W. Hughes, Thomas Brian Humensky, K. S. Kumar, Peter A. Mastromarino, J. Sodja, James L. Turner, Klaus H. Witte, and Michael B. Woods "SLAC's polarized electron source laser system for the E-158 parity violation experiment", Proc. SPIE 4632, Laser and Beam Control Technologies, (4 June 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.469769
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Stanford Linear Collider

Laser systems engineering

Electron beams

Laser scattering

Scattering

Beam controllers

Hydrogen

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